Hume's Analysis of Generality Kingsley Blake Price The Philosophical Review, Vol. 59, No. 1. (Jan., 1950), pp. 58-76. Stable URL: http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0031-8108%28195001%2959%3A1%3C58%3AHAOG%3E2.0.CO%3B2-%23 The Philosophical Review is currently published by Cornell University.
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HUME'S ANALYSIS OF GENERALITY
H
UME tells us that his arguments as to the nature of abstract or general ideas confirm the views of Berkeley on this subject.l Berkeley's opinion, as Hume understands it, is that "all general ideas are nothing but particular ones, annexed to a certain term, which gives them a more extensive signification, and makes them recall upon occasion other individuals, which are similar to them."2 Some commentators have been inclined to treat .Hume's analysis of abstract ideas as only an attempted confirmation of this ~ p i n i o n In . ~ this paper, however, I shall examine the doctrine on its own merits. I shall make three points: first, that according to Hume there are no general ideas of the sort supposed by some philosophers; secondly, that those supposed to be general in this sense are, according to Hume, general in another; and thirdly, that their generality in this sense, although suggestive, is quite untenable. I. In order to understand Hume's argument for the first point, that there are no general ideas of the sort supposed by some philosophers, it is necessary to make out what this sort is. The general ideas which he is concerned to analyze away are those involved in the "receiv'd opinion" which Berkeley disputes ;and the "receiv'd opinion" which Berkeley disputes is, explicitly, that of Locke4 and, in all likelihood, that of Malebranche with whose work on this subject Berkeley indicates familiar it^.^ It is clear, then, that Hume's critical arguments are directed against the views of Locke, the declared object of Berkeley's disputation; and since Hume also was thoroughly ac' A Treatise of Human Nature, ed. L. A. Selby Bigge (Clarendon Press,
18961, P. 17. a Ibid.,
p. 17. Cf. John Laird, Hume's Philosophy of Human Nature (Methuen & Co., Ltd., 1932), p. 55. In the section on abstract ideas (17 sqq.) Hume said that his sole intention was to confirm the arguments with which Berkeley had disputed the received opinion on this matter. Cf. Berkeley, Principles of Huwtan Knowledge, ed. T. E. Jessop (A. Brown and Sons, Ltd., 1937)~p. 12. Cf. Berkeley, Dialogues betweelt Hylas and Philonous, ed. Thomas J. McCormack (Open Court, 1gz7), p. 68.
HUME'S A N A L Y S I S OF GENERALITY
quainted with the works of Malebran~he,~ we may suppose that these arguments are directed against the latter also. What then are the opinions of the nature of general ideas held by Locke and Malebranche ? Locke's view of the nature of general ideas is conceptualistic. He maintains that they have no independent existence, but only that of the results of abstraction. "All things that exist," he writes, "are only particulars"; but "ideas become general, by separating from them the circumstances of time, and place, and any other ideas, that may determine them to this or that particular e~istence."~ Thus, the general idea, triangularity, is "neither oblique nor rectangle, neither equilateral, equicrural, nor scalenon; but all and none of these at once."8 General ideas, then, are ideas of those qualities or relations which are repeated in numerically different particulars. The generality of ideas, however, is a good deal more than this. The "natures" from which differences are abstracted by thought are, by this abstraction, "made capable of representing more individuals than one; each of which having in it a conformity to that abstract idea, is (as we call it) of that sort."g It is because ideas are repeated in different particulars that they represent them. This means that the repetition of an idea in others entails its representing them. The generality of an idea may be defined as consisting of its repetition in several others and its consequent representation of them. Words possess generality only so far as they name general ideas. The word "man," for example, is a general word because it is a sign for a general idea, i.e., an idea repeated in, and therefore representative of, the idea of each particular man. Thus, words name classes only if the ideas for which they are signs are general; and these are general only if, by abstraction from ideas of particular existents, they are found to be common to them, and for that reason, representative of them. Class names name classes because they name general ideas. Cf. Ralph W. Church, Hwme's Theory of the Understanding (Cornell University Press, 1g35), pp. 92-94. This author shows that Hume benefited greatly by reading Malebranche in connection with his treatment of necessity. W e may suppose that he was familiar with Malebranche's work in general. Hume refers directly to Malebranche twice in the Treatise (pp. 158,249). John Locke, An Essay on Human Understanding, bk. I11 ch. iii, sec. 6. Ibid., bk. IV, ch. vii, sec. 9. I ignore, here, the obvious contradiction in the passage above. Ibid., bk. 111, ch. iii, sec. 6.
T H E PHILOSOPHICAL R E V I E W
And the concepts which thus enable the words to name classes have no independent existence. Malebranche's view of general ideas, though very different in important respects from Locke's, is identical with it in three. I n the first place, the generality of an idea, he holds, includes its repetition in different particulars. "The idea of a circle in general. . .is applicable to them i.e., it is something present in the idea of every particular circle. I n the second place, as for Locke, the generality of an idea consists not only in repetition of it, but in its being representative of those particulars in which it recurs. "The idea of a circle in general represents infinite circles";ll and genera and species are represented by particular ideas of given members which are, in part, identical in the ideas of all the other members.12 I n the third place, Malebranche along with Locke holds that the repetition of an idea entails its representativeness. The idea of extension, he says, represents bodies because it is their "archetype."13 If some idea were not repeated as a part in the idea of every circle, one would not be aware of "a circle in general" but only of particular circles.14 Moreover, he holds that "Being can have no idea representative of it"; and it cannot be represented because there "is no archetype which could comprise all its intelligible reality."l"he reason why particular ideas such as the idea of "the circle" can represent others is that, in addition to their particular characteristics, each possesses at least one which is repeated in the ideas represented.ls If we ask what the status is of this repeated characteristic, we discover the chief difference between the views of Locke and Malebranche concerning the generality of ideas. For Locke, it is the product of the process of abstraction. For Malebranche, it is "the idea of the Infinite which is inseparable from our minds, and which naturally becomes united with the particular idea of which we are aware."17 lo Nicholas Malebranche, Dialogues on Metaphysics, trans. Morris Ginsberg (New York: Macmillan Co., 1923), p. 94.
Ibid., p. 94.
p. 95.
laIbid., p, 91.
l4 Zbid., p. 95.
Ibid., p. go.
laIbid., p. 95.
Ibid., p. 95.
"Ibid.,
HUME'S A N A L Y S I S OF GENERALITY
Thus, the generality of ideas depends upon our being aware of particulars rendered general in the "vision in God" according to which each particular idea is seen as repeated, and therefore as representative of its repetitions. The characteristic which is repeated and which makes representation possible exists independently of particular ideas, although found in them, as an idea in the "Infinite Mind";ls and Malebranches's view is, in this sense, realistic. This brief statement of the views of Locke and Malebranche may be taken as indicative of the "receiv'd opinion" concerning the generality of ideas which .Hume is concerned to dispute. This is the opinion that the following three properties constitute an exhaustive analysis of generality: ( I ) repeatedness, ( 2 ) representativeness, and ( 3 ) the entailment by repeatedness of representativeness. Only those ideas are general which are repeated, representative of their repetitions, and representative of them because their being repeated entails their being representative. To generality so analyzed, I shall give the name "generality by entailment." Hume's negative criticism of generality is clearly directed against this analysis of it. H e uses "abstract," "universal," and "general" as synonyms;19 and takes the general idea of man as a model for all general ideas. This idea represents men of all sizes and qualities20 But this representation would not be possible according to the "receiv'd opinion," unless either the idea were identical with all possible ideas of sizes and qualities or were something different from any idea of size and quality although repeated in each. The general idea of a man could not represent all men "but either by representing at once all possible sizes and all possible qualities, or by representing no particular one at The first alternative is absurd according to the opinion which Hume disputes, because it implies "an infinite capacity in the mind,"22 and Hume's negative arguments are designed to show that the second alternative is also untenable. But the point to notice here is that each alternative would make general ideas those which Is Ibid., p. 95. Generality is added to particular ideas by the "omnipotent efficacy of the intelligible substance of reason." Is Hume, op cit., pp. 17-20. "Ibid., p. 18. " Ibid., p. 18. Hume does not notice an important ambiguity in the word "represent." It means both to repeat or duplicate and to stand for or symbolize. In this context, he makes use of both meanings. " Ibid., p. 18.
T H E PHILOSOPHICAL REVIEW
are repeated, and representative because their repeatedness entails their representativeness. Hume attempts to demonstrate that the generality of ideas is not generality by entailment by showing that no idea can possess the properties included in generality of that sort. He presents three arguments against it. The first and third are designed to show that ideas cannot be repeated; and the second, that the representative character of any idea cannot be entailed by its repeatedness. These arguments are stated as separate proofs for the proposition that " 'tis utterly impossible to conceive any quantity or quality, without forming a precise notion of its degrees";23 and this proposition means that it is impossible to conceive any ideas which are not precise. Since Hume uses "precise," "particular," "determined," and "individual" as syno n y m ~and , ~ ~since "determined" and "particular" clearly mean unique, I infer that the proposition stated means that it is impossible to form any ideas which are repeated, and therefore, any which are representative because repeated. The first of the three arguments mentioned is the following : "Whatever objects are different are distinguishable, and. . .whatever objects are distinguishable are separable by the thought and imaginati~n."~~ But quantity is not different from precise quantities ; nor quality from degrees of quality. " 'Tis evident at first sight that the precise length of a line is not different nor distinguishable from the line itself; nor the precise degree of any quality from the quality."26 W e can form no idea of quantity or quality which is not that of a precise or unique quantity or quality; the general idea of line or of color is actually the idea of a given line or color. The third argument in the set mentioned proceeds from the premise that it is generally admitted that we have no idea of anything in "nature" or in "fact and reality'' which is not individual, i.e., which does not have a precise degree of quantity and quality ;27for anything which did not possess a precise degree of quantity and quality would be impossible and absurd. And we cannot have an idea of anything which is impossible and absurd. "But to form the idea of an object, Zbid., p. IS. 241bid., pp. 17, IS, 19, 25 Zbid., p. 18. "Zbid., pp. 18, 19. Zbid., p. 19.
20, 22.
H U M E ' S A N A L Y S I S OF G E N E R A L I T Y
and to form an idea simply is the same thing ; the reference of the idea to an object being an extraneous denomination, of which in itself it bears no mark or c h a r a ~ t e r . "The ~ ~ idea of a general object (of awareness) is the same idea as a general idea; and since its idea is impossible or absurd as the idea of an object, it is also impossible or absurd as an idea simply. Neither of these arguments proves that we cannot be aware of ideas possessed of generality by entailment, for neither of them proves that our ideas cannot be repeated. Each of them begs the question. If the length of a line is not different from the line, it cannot be separated from it in thought; and there is no general idea of line. But Hume simply asserts the evidentness of the protasis ; he does not prove it. H e then uses it to prove what he wishes to prove, namely, that we can be aware of no idea of anything which is not precise in quantity and quality. Similarly, the third argument begs the question by using as a premise the proposition that it is generally admitted that there is nothing in fact and reality which is not individual ; for this is precisely the point at issue. Aside from this fallacy, both the arguments prove something other than what Hume wishes to prove. The first shows that we can have no idea of quantity and quality as such which is repeated in ideas of given quantities and qualities, e.g., that there is no idea of length repeated in all ideas of lines, and no idea of color repeated in all ideas of colors. I t does not prove that the idea of a given quantity or quality cannot be repeated. The third argument also shows, aside from the first fallacy mentioned, that we cannot be aware of quantity or quality as such, but only of given quantities and qualities. It does not show that there are no ideas of given quantities and qualities which are repeated. The first and third arguments, then, do not refute the view that the generality of ideas is generality by entailment, for they do not show that ideas are incapable of repetition. The second argument is susceptible of two interpretations. I t runs as follows: All ideas are copies of impression^.^^ But all impressions are determined in quantity and quality. Consequently all ideas are determined, i.e., not generala30 Ibid., p. 20. "Many complex ideas are exceptions to this rule, but this point is not relevant here. Hume, op. cit., p. 19.
63
T H E PHILOSOPHICAL REVIEW
The first interpretation of this argument treats it as denying generality by entailment on the ground that no ideas can be repeated. On this interpretation, the argument is not successful on two counts. First, it begs the question by failing to prove that impressions cannot be repeated; and second, it does not necessitate its conclusion, since the doctrine that ideas are copies of impressions is one to which Hume admits exception^.^^ O n the second interpretation, this argument refutes generality by entailment on the ground that no impression can entail any other, and therefore, no impression can represent its repetitions because it entails them. When Hume writes that all impressions are determined, he adds that "the mind has no capacity to receive any impression which, in its real existence, has no particular degree nor p r ~ p o r t i o n . " ~ ~ H e may be thinking of Locke's general idea, triangularity, which is of no particular triangular shape, but found in the ideas of all triangles and therefore representative of them ; and he may also be thinking of Malebranche's general idea of a circle which, though possessed of no given diameter, is representative of infinite circles and which is so because "to think of a circle in general is to think of an infinite number of circles as a single circle."33 For he asserts that such "nondetermined'' impressions would be impossible in the sense that the "flattest of all contradictions" would have to be regarded as true of them, namely, that they both are and are not the impressions they are.34 Some properties of an impression entail others of the same impression, as "being a triangle" entails equality between the sum of the interior angles and that of two right angles.36No impression, however, can entail any different impression; for "there are not any two imIf any did, therefore, pressions which are perfectly in~eparable."~~ it would be identical with that different impression. Granting Hume's principle that ideas are copies of impressions, no repeated idea can entail its repetitions; and no idea can possess generality by entailment. The second argument on this interpretation is successful independently of the principle that ideas are copies of impressions. For Ibid., pp. 5-6.
Ibid., p. 19.
Malebranche, op. cit., p. 89.
Hume, op. cit., p. 19.
Ibid., p. 69.
Ibid., p, 10.
HUMPS ANALYSIS OF GENERALITY
the principle which demonstrates that one impression cannot entail another applies as well to ideas. Although the second argument, strictly taken, depends upon the copy theory of ideas, and therefore begs the question at issue, it suggests this valid refutation of generality by entailment. These are the arguments by which Hume attempts to prove that no ideas can possess generality by entailment. The first and third attempt, unsuccessfully, to show that no idea can possess the first property included in that analysis of generality; the second attempts, unsuccessfully, to show that no idea can possess the third. But the second does suggest the valid refutation stated above. Although Hume rejects generality by entailment, he never doubts that there are ideas which are general in some sense. I shall now state and examine the analysis of generality which he offers in place of the one discarded. 2 . The "receiv'd opinion" which Hume dismisses makes the representative function of general ideas consist in the relation of entailment between them and other ideas which repeat them in whole or in part. The account which Hume offers of generality retains the representative function of general ideas but analyzes that function differently. It dispenses with the concepts of repetition and of entailment and puts in place of the former a doctrine of the resemblance of ideas and in place of the latter a doctrine of what I shall refer to as "cur~~ Hume's analysis of generality makes it tailed a s s ~ c i a t i o n . "Thus, consist in the following three properties of an idea : ( I ) its resemblance to others, ( 2 ) its representativeness of them, and ( 3 ) its curtailed association with them. I shall call this analysis of generality "generality by curtailed association," and I shall discuss the properties which it utilizes in order. The use which Hume makes of the first of these properties, resemblance, cannot be understood without reference to his doctrine concerning the names for classes. General ideas represent the ideas of the members of classes. Words which name general ideas, therefore, name classes indirectly. .How does a word come to name a general idea? Hume answers this question in the following way: "Hume does not use this phrase. Its meaning will be clarified shortly.
65
T H E PHILOSOPHICAL R E V I E W When ev'ry individual of any species of objects is found by experience to be constantly united with an individual of another species, the appearance of any new individual of either species naturally conveys the thought to its usual attendant. Thus because such a particular idea is commonly annex'd to such a particular word, nothing is requir'd but the hearing of that word to produce the correspondent idea; and 'twill scarce be possible for the mind, by its utmost efforts, to prevent that transition."
The same word "annex'd to" or conjoined with an idea in each of its "appearances" comes to produce that idea, and the relation of "name for" consists in that of "productiveness of" the idea named. The idea which represents the ideas of the members of a class is named by the word which produces it. Such a word Hume calls a "general term."39 Hume holds that between the ideas named by general terms, i.e., the ideas of the members of classes, there are resemblances of three kinds; and his doctrine of class names is used to determine the first. I shall call it "nominal resemblance." The idea of each member of a class is named by the same name, i.e., the idea of it is produced by the same word. Thus, the idea of Michel de Ruyter, of Paul Jones, of Horatio Nelson, etc., is produced by the word "man" as the idea of any other man may be. The idea of each member of a class is produced by the general term which names the class; and this nominal resemblance plays a part in Hume's analysis of the representative function of general ideas40 The second kind of resemblance is teleological. The idea of each member of a class resembles every other as the idea of something which serves some purpose of conversation, r e f l e ~ t i o n life,42 , ~ ~ or any "present design or n e c e ~ s i t y . "The ~ ~ generality of ideas makes possible the intellectual understanding and the practical control of that which is not immediately present, but this realization of theoretical and practical purposes requires that the idea of each member of a class be the idea of something which satisfies the same purpose as every other member Nothing is more admirable, than the readiness, with which the imagination suggests its ideas, and presents them at the very instant, in which they become Hume, op. cit., p. 93. p. 22.
40 Ibid., p. 20.
4' Ibid., p. 18.
'@ Ibid.,
4Vbid., p. Ibid., p.
43
20.
20.
H U M E ' S A N A L Y S I S OF G E N E R A L I T Y necessary or useful. The fancy runs from one end of the universe to the other in collecting those ideas, which belong to any subject. One would think the whole intellectual world of ideas was at once subjected to our view, and that we did nothing but pick out such as were most proper for our purpo~e."~
The third kind of resemblance between the ideas of the members of classes is what I shall call "resemblance of content." "When we have found a resemblance among several objects, that often occur to us, we apply the same name to all of them, whatever differences we may observe in their degrees of quantity and quality, and whatever other differences may appear among them."45 A resemblance of content between the ideas of the members of classes is a resemblance between any of their properties other than their nominal and teleological resemblances. It cannot be a nominal resemblance since it is the basis for "applying" the same name to each of the ideas. I t cannot be a teleological resemblance since it constitutes the reason for finding the things which fall within a given class useful. The second property included in generality by curtailed association is the representativeness of an idea which possesses generality. The "receiv'd opinion" to which Locke and Malebranche subscribed, that of generality by entailment, analyzed this property in terms of repeatedness of the idea or some feature of it meant by a general term, and of the entailment by this idea of those in which it is repeated. Hume rejects this analysis on the grounds that since all ideas are particular, none can be repeated; and that since no impression could entail any other, all ideas are similarly atomistic; but since he does not doubt that there are ideas which stand for the members of classes by standing for their ideas, he must account for this second property by some concept other than the entailment of recurrences. This concept is the third property included in his analysis of generality, that of curtailed association. Association, the "gentle force" which unites ideas,46 is based upon several properties of the ideas united, one of which is their resemblance to one another. A particular idea, therefore, is associated with those which resemble it in the three ways I have mentioned, and it is this association with them which renders it representative of them. A general term names many particular ideas ; but "the application of each such particular idea beyond Ibid., p. 24. Ibid., p. 20. 48 Ibid., pp. 10-1 I. 44
46
67
T H E PHILOSOPHICAL R E V I E W
its nature"47 which is its association with ideas which resemble it in the three ways stated makes it representative of all the rest. This is part of the meaning of Hume's assertion that "some ideas are particular in their nature, but gmeral in their representati~n."~~ However, this assertion means a good deal more. "To be associated with ideas" is to be present in a series of ideas in which each "naturally" introduces the one which follows4gby a "kind of attraction which in the mental world is analogous to the attraction of one physical object for another."50 No idea then is literally associated with others unless there is an entire associative series of ideas in the mind in which it occurs. General ideas are often not associated, strictly speaking, with those they represent, for the latter are usually so numerous that attention cannot draw them out explicitly without impeding the progress of thought. Rather, they are "present in power"; and although one might think that "the whole intellectual world of ideas were at once subjected to our view," the ideas literally associated with that which is present in most cases drop out of mind altogether, leaving only the custom or habit which would revive them were it convenient to survey them.51 A general idea is not one actually associated with others, but one which puts the mind in "readiness" to introduce those which resemble it." I t represents them by association which is curtailed. The phrase "curtailed association" does not occur in Hume's writings concerning generality; and the reader may not be familiar with that part of .Hume's doctrine to which it refers. In order to facilitate understanding, the meaning of that phrase will be set down in greater detail, and that part of Hume's view to which it refers will be indicated by a quotation. "To be associated with ideas," as has been pointed out, means to be present in a series of ideas each of which, except for the last, draws another into the mind. "Association" is a name for any such series of ideas. "To be curtailed" means to be cut short. Consequently, curtailed association" is a name for any associative series some or 6<
Ibid., p. 20. Ibid., p. 22. 481bid., p. 11. Ibid., PP. 12-13. Ibid., pp. 20-2I. Ibid., p. 20. "
HUME'S A N A L Y S I S OF GENERALITY
most of the terms of which have not in fact been drawn into any mind whatever. "Curtailed association" thus means one or more ideas to which there attaches an unrealized habit of attracting others. These other ideas are all those which, if each possible association were realized, would be introduced into the mind in which the present one is found by attraction to it; but which, because some or each possible association is not realized, are not in fact so drawn. As a name for a relation rather than a series, the phrase means that relation which subsists between the members of each pair of contiguous ideas in such a series. In the statements which follow, Hume asserts that there are curtailed associations, and attempts to show how they enter into the analysis of generality. He writes :
..
.as the same word is suppos'd to have been frequently applied to other individuals, that are different in many respects from that idea, which is immediately present to the mind; the word not being able t o revive the idea of all these individuals, only touches the soul, .and revives that custom, which we have acquir'd by surveying them. They are not really and in fact present to the mind, but only in power; nor do we draw them all out distinctly in the imagination, but keep ourselves in a readiness to survey any of them, as we may be prompted by a present design or necessity. The word raises up an individual idea, along with a certain custom; and that custom produces any other individual one, for which we may have occasion. But as the production of all the ideas, to which the name may be apply'd is in most cases impossible, we abridge that work by a more partial consideration.
..
.. ."
This more partial consideration is the awareness of a curtailed associative series of ideas. Having rejected generality by entailment, Hume analyzes that characteristic of ideas in terms of generality by curtailed association. An idea is general, he holds, only if it is one which is related to others by resemblance of name, of purpose, and of content, is representative of them and representative of them because related to them by association which is curtailed. 3. Is this analysis of generality adequate to solve Hume's problem? The answer to this question is in the negative ; and in order to support this statement, that problem must be formulated. Hume nowhere makes it explicit; but it seems clear that his difficulty consists in maintaining empiricism without denying meaning to general terms. The view that the only source of knowledge is experience or, in Hume's words, that
" Ibid., pp. 20-21. 69
T H E PHILOSOPHICAL REVIEW
"every idea, with which the imagination is furnish'd, first makes its to make it imappearance in a correspondent i m p r e ~ s i o n , "seems ~~ possible that general terms should refer to anything but particulars ; for it seems that impressions are only particular. Locke, it might be supposed, denied empiricism by asserting that the meaning of "triangularity" was something found in the ideas of all triangles, but identical with no observable triangle ; and Malebranche clearly denied empiricism by arguing that all ideas which represent the members of classes are ideas in the infinite mind. .Hume makes the assumption that sensory experience affords nothing but particulars ; and is obliged, therefore, to show how generality can attach to particular ideas on the assumption that empiricism is true. I n order to determine whether his analysis of generality is adequate to solve this problem, each property in the analysis must be considered. The first of these is that threefold resemblance which Hume puts in the place of repetition in generality by entailment. Is it possible for ideas to resemble each other without repetition? If resemblance were a relation which did not presuppose repetition, Hume would be successful in this part of his enterprise; but his own work as well as a certain analytical consideration does not allow this interpretation of that relation. That his own work does not will be shown by an examination, first, of his definition of "relation," and second, of his doctrine of the specific relation of resemblance. There are two definitions of "relation" discoverable in the Treatise, one explicit and the other implicit in various passages where the term is used. Each of these definitions, none the less, is such that resemblance as a specific relation requires that some ingredient of its terms be repeated. In order to show this, the two definitions of "relation" must be stated. Hume's explicit definition of "relation" is that this term is a name for any quality which serves either or both of two functions: that of associating in the imagination those ideas which exhibit it, and that of enabling their c o m p a r i ~ o n .Qualities ~~ which perform the first function are natural relations, and this class comprises resemblance, contiguity, and causation. Qualities which perform the second are 54Zbid., p. 33. The necessary qualifications of Hume's doctrine in this regard, concerning complex ideas and a few simple ones, need only be mentioned. 6S Ibid., p. 13.
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philosophical relations ; this class comprises the same three subordinate classes as well as several others. That relations are commonly thought of as different from qualities should not deter the reader from believing that Hume adopts this definition however odd it may seem. But it may, upon occasion, have seemed odd to Hume; for in his use of the term "relation," there is an implicit definition more in accord with common language. Thus, in a discussion of the "extent" of the natural relations, he observes that resemblance, contiguity, and causation may relate any two ideas between which there are placed others which bear the same relations to the two former.56 I t is clear that in this passage the term relation, although used in at least one other sense, means a connection rather than a quality; for in explaining the "extent" of natural relations, Hume explains the number of items connected by them. In this passage and in others like it which are quite numerous, Hume distinguishes the natural relation of connection or association from the qualities which give rise to it. With regard to the treatment of "philosophical relation," there is a similar deviation from the explicit definition. I n the paragraph which introduces what purport to be seven kinds of philosophical relations, he says that it might be thought difficult to enumerate all the qualities "by which the ideas of philosophical relation are produced" ;57and, in the next sentence, that the seven general heads "may be considered as the sources of all philosophical relation^."^^ In this passage, the term "philosophical relation'' is used to mean not a quality which assists in the production of a comparison, but some feature of the object of an act of comparison thus produced. This consideration of .Hume's explicit definition and of some cases of his use of the term "relation" shows that he sometimes means by that term any member of that class of qualities each of which is a partial cause of association or of comparison, while at other times, he means by it that association, or that ingredient in objects compared which is discovered by their comparison. In each case, the first is natural ; and the second, philosophical. 56 Ibid., p. 11. It is clear that the sense in which association by contiguity, and association by causation are associations caused bv "qualities" is a verv odd one. Whether association by resemblance is caused by-a quality in the ordinary sense of that word will come out later on. Ibid., p. 14. Ibid., p. 14.
T H E PHILOSOPHICAL R E V I E W
I n each of these senses of the term "relation," resemblance is a relation which involves repetition. As a natural relation, interpreted in the first sense of "relation," "resemblance" is a name for any case of a quality which is repeated one or more times and which causes an association of those instances of it. As a name for a natural relation in the second sense, it names the association thus produced. In the first sense of "relation," Al and A2 when associated, exhibit the resemblance A ; and in the second sense, the natural relation of resemblance is the association caused by the two instances of A. "Resemblance" as a name for a philosophical relation in the first sense, refers again to the repeated feature A, considered independently of the association which that repetition assists in producing. Since in the second sense of "relation," a philosophical relation is an ingredient of the object of the act of comparison, "resemblance" as a name for a philosophical relation in the second sense is a name for the same thing. The resemblance of what is compared is again A, discovered to be repeated by virtue of the comparison. Whether interpreted as a natural relation or as philosophical, in the first or second senses of "reIation," Hume's use of the terms "relation" and "resemblance" requires, we may say, that he regard resemblance as involving repetition of some feature of one of the terms of the relation in the other. This conclusion is confirmed by Hume's discussion of resemblance as a philosophical relation. H e tells us that when a quality is common to a great many individuals, it does not produce an association between them; but that the philosophical relation of resemblance is necessary to all other philosophical relations.69 This statement makes it clear that the philosophical relation of resemblance, regardless of which definition of relation is applied, involves repetition; and that resemblance as a natural relation, regardless of which definition of relation is applied, also involves repetition. This consideration of Hume's treatment of relation generally, and resemblance specifically, shows that association by resemblance depends upon the recurrence of qualities. On his own analysis, generality by association cannot, therefore, dispense with repetition. If this property of ideas is inconlpatible with empiricism as Hume supposes, his analysis of generality does not remove the problem which he finds in the "receiv'd opinion." Ibid., p. 14.
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H U M P S ANALYSIS OF G E N E R A L I T Y
Hume suggests an alternative analysis of the philosophical relation of resemblance, but it serves him in no better stead. Aaron points out that in the appendix to the treatise, Hume suggests that resemblance, apparently philosophical, is not the repetition of a quality, but is a relation, that of ~imilarity.~O If this were Hume's view, then the meaning of a general term would be many ideas associated in the way he describes, but by pairs, each member of which is related to the other by similarity and related to a member of some other pair by the same relation.G1 Similarity would itself be repeated, and Hume's problem would appear again. I n any case, resemblance must involve something repeated, either a quality or relation. For one may ask, concerning things which resemble one another, what feature it is by virtue of which the resemblance subsists between them. The only way to answer this question is to point out that the terms concerned either exhibit a common quality or are themselves complexes within each of which a given relation may be discovered. The only alternative to this view is that terms may be related by resemblance without reference to any other of their properties. This view is quite incredible. Hume, however, misconstrues his problem. There is nothing about the repetition of observable qualities and relations which is incompatible with empiricism, and many qualities and relations are repeated. That some colors match, that some instruments play in unison, that some shapes are repeated are statements which possess as much certainty as can be acquired by sensory observation. The meaning of general terms presents a problem for empiricism only in those cases in which terms of this kind appear to mean something which cannot be observed. In this paper, there is not space to discuss the applicability of Hume's analysis to these cases. The second property in generality by association is that of representativeness. There is no doubt that some ideas do represent others. The doubt which arises concerning the ideas which represent the members of classes does not concern this property, but the nature of the relation by virtue of which one idea represents others. Does Hume's treatment of this relation give him an answer to the question 'OR. I. Aaron, Hume's Theory of Ufiiversals (Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, 1941-42). "Except, of course, for the first and last pairs in the associative series. 73
T H E PHILOSOPHICAL REVIEW
of how empiricism can be true, ideas particular, and general terms meaningful ? The third property included in Hume's analysis of generality by association is presented as this relation. It is the curtailed association or custom, attaching to the particular idea of calling to mind those ideas which resemble it, which constitutes the relation of representation. However, a curtailed association is a useless, because an impossible, entity; and Hume does not succeed in showing that one particular idea represents others by possessing a curtailed association with them. That it is an impossible entity follows from its being contradictory, and that it is contradictory is shown by the following considerations. A case of ideas associated is a series of ideas each of which, except the last, "gently attracts" another in the manner mentioned above. "To be associated with" means, therefore, to draw another idea into awaren e s B 2It is clear that "curtailed association" is a contradictory term, for it is taken to name a series of several ideas which is not really a series since all but one idea have been eliminated by curtailment. If an idea is associated with others, it really is so; and that association cannot be curtailed. A custom is an association established by frequent recurrence. It is also evident, therefore, that a custom cannot be curtailed. It follows that no idea can represent others by virtue of the relation of curtailed association. This same fact can be put differently. One of Hume's own illustrations serves to demonstrate the inadequacy of the principle which it exemplifies. Any particular idea may represent many classes, but its meaning varies from one context to another according as this or that class name is used to produce it. This difference in the classes represented is traceable, Hume holds, to the different curtailed associative trains produced, in part, by different nominal resemblances. Thus the idea of an equilateral triangle of an inch perpendicular may serve us in talking of a figure, of a rectilineal figure, of a regular figure, of a triangle, and of an equilateral triangle. All these terms, therefore, are in this case attended with the same idea; but as they are wont to be apply'd in a greater or lesser compass, they excite their particular habits, and thereby keep the mind in a readiness to observe that no conclusion be form'd contrary to any ideas, which are usually compriz'd under them.@ " O r to be drawn into it by another idea.
Hume, op. cit., pp. 21, 22.
HUME'S A N A L Y S I S O F GENERALITY
The point to notice, however, is that if none of the associative trains of ideas is actuated, the idea named by these terms can mean nothing. The distinguishable elements of an associative series are the ideas in it, and the feeling of attraction which connects the different ideas. The difference between associative series which is here relevant is the difference of ideas in them, for the feelings of attraction are the same in all. But an idea which actuates none of the series in which it occurs is one to which a feeling of power or expectancy alone attaches. It therefore cannot be taken as representing one class rather than another in a given context because it represents none whatever. The doctrine of representation by curtailed association which Aaron correctly asserts64 is an original contribution on Hume's part to the attempt to analyze generality fails utterly; it makes representation altogether impossible. Hume's analysis of generality is inadequate. It fails not merely to show that particular ideas represent those with which they have curtailed association; it also fails to show that the relation of resemblance enables one to dispense with the concept of repetition to which Hume's negative arguments make so much objection. If it were necessary either to accept this analysis of generality in its first and third features or to reject empiricism in order to maintain the generality of ideas, the careful reader would find little reason in Hume to adhere to empiricism. Hun~e'streatment of generality consists of two parts: the arguments directed against the "receiv'd opinion" concerning its nature, and those considerations by which Hume advances his own view on that subject. Most of his negative arguments are directed toward showing that the "receiv'd opinion," generality by entailment, is impossible because ideas cannot be repeated; and these arguments, so interpreted, fail. However, one of them may be interpreted as denying generality by entailment by denying the possibility that entailment relates any ideas which are different, and this argument is successful. Hume's positive view concerning generality is that its proper analysis is generality by association which is curtailed. This analysis breaks down first, because resemblance implies repetition; and, second, because there can be no such thing as curtailed association. 64
Aaron, op. cit., p. I 17. 75
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Hume does not succeed in showing that there are no universals in the sense of qualities and relations capable of repetition; rather, he succeeds in suggesting an analysis of generality which requires the repeatability of the properties of things and obviates the necessity for reference to anything which is incapable of presentation in experience. To formulate the view he thus suggests is, however, a task which cannot be undertaken in this essay.
KINGSLEY BLAKE PRICE Sarah Lawrence College